Is Public Health Ready? Incentivizing Planning and Preparedness for Emerging Threats

The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ASPA as an organization.

By Nathan MyersFebruary 12, 2016

As globalization brings new medical challenges to the United States, planning and preparedness must take on a higher priority in the public health field. While public health is facing reduced funding throughout the U.S. government, some national member organizations have kept planning and preparedness in the spotlight and acknowledge those public health organizations that have anticipated the next threat.

The Zika virus has gained recent recognition as an international threat, with many calls for the World Health Organization (WHO) to mount a coordinated response. The virus’ suspected link to birth defects and other diseases has led to travel advisories and precautionary policies, including advising women in countries like El Salvador to delay pregnancy. The WHO convened a meeting and declared Zika a public health emergency.

The National Association of City and County Health Officials (NACCHO) has been incentivizing the institutionalization of planning, preparedness and response work by recognizing health departments and jurisdictions that have met best practice standards through the Public Health Ready program. The plans local health departments have to submit to receive this recognition encompass consideration of numerous criteria, including legal and administrative preparedness, community preparedness and recovery.

Legal and administrative preparedness includes the efficient accepting, allocating and spending of funds from different sources. Public health preparedness, particularly collaborative endeavors, has become dependent on grant funding from a variety of federal sources, making grant management an important skill. Community preparedness encompasses the need to have knowledge of, and collaboration with, vulnerable and underserved populations in the community. The work of Lawrence Gostin and others has long highlighted the need to incorporate ethical considerations into public health policy. This should include not only accounting for the needs of vulnerable populations, but also allowing them to have meaningful input into planning and preparedness efforts.

Another criterion emphasized by the Public Health Ready program is community recovery. Planning in this area should include consideration of short- and long-term recovery goals, an assessment of what resources will be needed to meet those goals, as well as an assessment of what resources are readily available in the jurisdiction. A plan needs to be in place to rebuild essential health services, as public health emergencies can affect health providers and degrade existing capabilities. Multi-organization collaboration can be essential, as departments may develop agreements regarding such issues as sharing personnel. Communication among members of this collaborative, as well as with the public at large, will be vital to response and recovery efforts.

Public health collaborative organizations should maintain and regularly test communication systems, which will allow them to share updated information quickly and efficiently during a crisis. The timing of response actions should be clearly mapped out and it should be understood who holds the legal authority to undertake those actions. All such actions should be carefully documented so as to accurately track the response. Recovery from a major public health crisis in a community may take time, but having clear plans in place beforehand, as well as the means to systematically implement them, should help to allay public concern and avoid an erosion of public trust.

Regardless of how severe the effects of Zika ultimately turn out to be, its emergence illustrates that more attention to public health preparedness, planning and response in the U.S. is needed. This is particularly true when one takes into account the views expressed in a recent Foreign Policy article by Laurie Garrett, which suggests that Zika may not represent an emerging epidemic, but rather an endemic threat. A temporary surge may not be enough; public health organizations may need to prepare to manage it over a long period.

Such a prospect makes it all the more imperative that more U.S. public health organizations develop the capabilities in the Public Health Ready criteria, particularly effective financial management, collaboration with vulnerable populations and well-defined planning for community recovery. Just as the World Health Organization should take this opportunity to consider how to coordinate responses to global threats more quickly and effectively, our federal government system, in conjunction with groups like NACCHO, must give serious policy attention to public health planning, preparedness and response to deal with existing and emerging threats.

Author:Nathan Myers is an assistant professor of Political Science at Indiana State University. He primarily teaches courses in the Master of Public Administration program. Myers is also a member of the ISU Center for Genomic Advocacy. His teaching and research interests include organizational behavior, public health policy and biotechnology policy associated with genomic research.

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One Response to Is Public Health Ready? Incentivizing Planning and Preparedness for Emerging Threats

It is apparent that there are not nearly enough public health officials with public administration training; and, not enough public administrators with public health training. There are too few educational programs that attempt to cross train an essential cadre of a new generation of professionals who can do both.